Hi Ken,

Are you willing to help prepare a project proposal based on a combination of 
stratospheric and tropospheric SRM techniques, but not ruling out other 
geoengineering?  

I believe that a combined SRM approach would have many advantages, such as: 
1. reducing risk of one technique failing by itself;
2. tuning for targetting the Arctic sea ice and other regions/ecosystems as 
required;
3. minimisation of any serious side-effects;
4. minimisation of cost (subject to above).

Making the project broader than just SRM would have the additional benefits:
5. encouraging integration of other geo-scale technology;
6. encouraging integration of local technology/engineering for particular 
regions/ecosystems, esp to save the Arctic sea ice;
7. engaging environmentalists, bio-engineers and people from other disciplines.

This needs to be a "all hands on deck" proposal.   Who else could help in its 
preparation?  

Our number one priority must be to cool the Arctic.  I've just heard rumour of 
a new report suggesting the Arctic sea ice could go in 3-7 years.  And massive 
methane release could start at any time.

Cheers from Chiswick,

John

P.S.  It seems I'm not the first to suggest a Manhattan Project with 
geoengineering:
http://www.metatronics.net/lit/geo2.html

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ken Caldeira 
  To: John Nissen 
  Cc: David Schnare ; John Latham ; Alvia Gaskill 
  Sent: Wednesday, November 26, 2008 5:38 AM
  Subject: Re: the science and technology of climate cooling ???


  Isn't 'remediation' closer to the intended meaning than 'restoration'?

  Remediation: Efforts to counteract some or all of the effects of pollution 
after it has been released into an environment.

  Restoration: The process of bringing an object back to its original state


  ___________________________________________________
  Ken Caldeira

  Carnegie Institution Dept of Global Ecology
  260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305 USA

  [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  http://dge.stanford.edu/DGE/CIWDGE/labs/caldeiralab
  +1 650 704 7212; fax: +1 650 462 5968  




  On Tue, Nov 25, 2008 at 4:18 PM, John Nissen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


    Hi Ken,

    1.  Don't we actually want something suggesting good value?  Don't we want 
people to say "why wasn't this done ages ago, because it's so obviously a good 
thing?"?
    2.  We are restoring climate, not climate parameters.
    3.  My point about "restoration" is that it gives useful leeway - it begs 
the questions "towards what state/date?" and "how far".  In the case of the 
Sahara, there was flourishing agriculture at one time, so one might like to 
restore the climate to allow agriculture back.  In most cases one would aim to 
restore a region or ecosystem part-way or all-way to some pre-industrial state 
when life was flourishing.  Indeed, perhaps one should consider "ecosystem 
restoration" or "ecosystem recovery" rather than "climate restoration".  One of 
the great potential benefits of geoengineering is in reducing species 
extinctions - we have estimates of 30-50% extinctions with 2 degrees C of 
warming.  The Arctic ocean is a very significant ecosystem, which is in 
desperate need of recovery, not only for animals like polar bears, but also for 
marine life.

    "Improvement" has the disadvantage that some climates may have been 
improved by global warming, for some people.  For example the Arctic is 
improved for oil exploration by sea ice retreat.  And "improvement" is rather 
more subjective than "restoration".

    But shouldn't we talking about a joint project?  This could be for 
submission to the Royal Society by Dec 11th, to give us a deadline and 
incentive.  Ken, John, Stephen, would you be game for a project proposal 
combining stratospheric and tropospheric techniques?  Who else could we bring 
in?  Alvia, could you advise?  For example, could/should Alan Robock be 
persuaded/invited?  

    Cheers,

    John (to bed as past midnight here)


      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Ken Caldeira 
      To: John Nissen 
      Cc: David Schnare ; John Latham ; Stephen Salter 
      Sent: Tuesday, November 25, 2008 5:34 PM
      Subject: Re: the science and technology of climate cooling ???


      My problem with 'climate restoration' is threefold:

      1. It is too obviously value laden, so it will never be adopted by people 
who are both for and against this work.

      2. We are not restoring the climate system's longwave and shortwave 
fluxes to any earlier state. We are partially offsetting a change in longwave 
fluxes with a change in short wave fluxes. The scientific climate community 
will not see this as a restoration, even if certain fields are more similar to 
the earlier state.

      3. I do not agree that the goal is 'restoration'. I think the goal is 
something closer to 'improvement'. (If climate change were to make the Sahel 
moister, would we want to restore them back to crippling droughts?)


      ___________________________________________________
      Ken Caldeira

      Carnegie Institution Dept of Global Ecology
      260 Panama Street, Stanford, CA 94305 USA

      [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
      http://dge.stanford.edu/DGE/CIWDGE/labs/caldeiralab
      +1 650 704 7212; fax: +1 650 462 5968  




      On Tue, Nov 25, 2008 at 9:20 AM, John Nissen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


        Dear David,

        I proposed that we refer to "climate restoration" rather than "climate 
cooling", as I believe that should be our objective in using some of the 
proposed geoengineering techniques.  But you are concerned by side-effects.

        The side-effects of the proposed climate restoration techniques, using 
stratospheric aerosols and marine cloud brightening, are well researched 
because we can study the effects of volcanoes (like Pinatubo) and contrails 
from ships respectively.  It turns out that both techniques are relatively 
benign - and benefits (including the protection of both terrestrial and oceanic 
carbon sinks, which threaten to decline due to global warming) vastly outweigh 
the negative side effects (such as a small amount of ozone depletion and acid 
rain in the case of sulphate aerosols).  Neither technique is life threatening. 
 Furthermore neither technique is expensive - we are talking of a few billion 
dollars per annum at most.  On the other hand, without geoengineering, the cost 
of adaptation to global warming, even just the global warming in the pipeline, 
is enormous - and millions of lives would be affected. 

        It seems that the media are determined to poke fun at geoengineering, 
but they are producing a lot of disinformation which distracts the policy 
makers from the task at hand, i.e. to save ourselves from getting caught in a 
spiral of global warming and sea level rise, which would most likely follow 
from loss of sea ice or massive methane release in the Arctic region.

        However, if it is a scientific advisor to the government who denigrates 
geoengineering [1] [2], then I am concerned that they may not be giving good 
advice to policy makers, which would be a breach of duty and moral obligation.

        I challenge anyone to come up with a strong argument why we should not 
deploy geoengineering, when this appears the only way to guard against the 
risks of Arctic sea ice disappearance and massive methane release, either of 
which could happen in the next few years.  

        Surely geoengineering has to be top priority for government, although 
it should be done in conjunction with mitigation efforts.

        Kind regards,

        John

        John Nissen
        Chiswick, London W4

        [snip]
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